Glasgow Times

SEX SLAVE GANG BUSTED

‘Human trafficker­s sold teenagers for £10k’

- By HANNAH RODGER

ATRAFFICKI­NG ring suspected of selling teenagers and women for as much as £10,000 has been busted in Glasgow. A major police raid was held on four flats.

ATRAFFICKI­NG ring which sold teenagers and women for as much as £10,000 has been busted in Glasgow, say police.

Women who it’s suspected were raped, abused and forced to work as prostitute­s were led to safety prior to the major police raid in Govanhill.

Dozens of officers from Police Scotland’s Specialist Crime Division and Europol targeted four flats in Govanhill yesterday as part of a three-year long operation into traffickin­g and exploitati­on.

Two flats in Allison Street, one in Langside Road and another in Calder Street were raided by 70 officers around 8.45am and three potential victims were found inside along with their alleged trafficker­s.

A further 13 suspected victims, aged between 18 and 25, had already been helped to safety by police ahead of yesterday’s sting from across the UK, including in Glasgow.

Five people have been arrested in connection with the raid, dubbed Operation Synapsis, which has been in developmen­t since 2014 and spans the length of the UK.

They were expected to appear at Glasgow sheriff court earlier today.

Two Slovakian women, aged 40 and 25, two Slovakian men aged 58 and 28, and a Nepalese man aged 35, were taken into police custody yesterday morning for questionin­g and have subsequent­ly been arrested.

Police claim that Slovakian women as young as 18 were trafficked to the UK by bus and plane, having been promised a better life and work.

When they arrived they were allegedly sold for between £3000 and £10,000 as part of a sham marriage scheme. Their buyers, mainly men from Pakistan, wanted EU citizenshi­p so they could live and work in Europe, and bought the women to become their wives.

Some of the victims, who weren’t sold immediatel­y, were prostitute­d, raped and abused while others were abused by their purchasers.

Many have been left deeply traumatise­d by what they have experience­d, with some choosing to stay in the UK and others returning to their families in Slovakia after escaping their abusers.

Officers have previously helped other suspected female victims of the traffickin­g ring, ranging from 18 years old to their mid 20s, by referring them to support organisati­ons in Glasgow and across the country.

Police Scotland’s Specialist Crime Division, the National Human Traffickin­g unit, financial crime and specialist officers from the Rape Taskforce, Europol, Immigratio­n Enforcemen­t, Glasgow City Council’s social work department and Slovakian police were all involved in the Govanhill raid.

Crews from the council’s Traffickin­g Awareness Raising Alliance (TARA), which helps victims of sex traffickin­g, were also on hand to support any victims recovered at the scene, while members of the public were given letters and advice on how to spot the signs of traffickin­g.

At the same time, hit squads from Greater Manchester police were targeting homes south of the Border as part of the same operation, with the traffickin­g ring thought to extend to several areas in Britain.

The European Court of Justice in the Hague had to grant Police Scotland permission to form a joint investigat­ion with the Slovakian police force and the Metropolit­an police before they could work together on targeting trafficker­s in both the UK and abroad.

DETECTIVE Inspector Steven McMillan, the operation’s Senior Investigat­ing Officer, told the Evening Times the raid was the first of two planned stings.

Police Scotland officers are planning to travel to England next week to target trafficker­s thought to be involved in the same network.

He said the traffickin­g victims are often women who “have come from an impoverish­ed area, they have low lev-

els of intelligen­ce and are gullible.”

DI McMillan explained: “There is no conversati­on about marriage before they get here. They arrive in whatever house they end up in and at least two or three males enter.

“[They] have a conversati­on that they don’t understand as it’s in English or sometimes in Urdu, and it’s the case of ‘ You’re with him. He’s got your identity document. You’re going to marry him now.’

“My own view on it is it’s financial. They are treating these girls as a commodity. They can recruit them, it costs them nothing apart from a flight or a bus ticket.

“The original purpose of the traffickin­g seems to have been the sham marriage but many of these women have been forced in to prostituti­on, they have been raped, they have been subject to abuse that would never have happened if they hadn’t been trafficked in the first place.

“Very quickly they will move them on and in the cases where they haven’t these girls have been forced into prostituti­on, they have that element of control of over them and are still recouping the money.

“When you’re speaking to the girls and hearing their story, it’s not one or two clients a night. It’s a procession. It’s absolutely horrible.”

DI McMillan said the force is committed to protecting the public and tackling human traffickin­g, and has appealed for help from Glasgow residents. He said: “Any informatio­n at all is welcome.”

Anyone with informatio­n on suspected traffickin­g or labour exploitati­on is asked to contact Police Scotland on 101, Crimestopp­ers on 0800 0121 700, or they can contact the Modern Slavery Human Traffickin­g helpline on 08000 121 700.

 ??  ?? Detective Inspector Steven McMillan, below, hit out at the treatment of the girls ahead of the raids on the city flats
Detective Inspector Steven McMillan, below, hit out at the treatment of the girls ahead of the raids on the city flats
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 ??  ?? Suspects are led away, above and below, after the major operation into traffickin­g and exploitati­on in the South Side of Glasgow
Suspects are led away, above and below, after the major operation into traffickin­g and exploitati­on in the South Side of Glasgow
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